STORY GUIDEQuiet Heroes:Stories Of Courage and CompassionRetold By Judy Lubin

These stories teach children the true
meaning of the word hero. While these stories are loved by people of all ages,
I originally prepared all of them for second graders at a Waldorf school. In a
Waldorf curriculum, stories are used to help guide children through the
emotional stages of growing up. By third grade, most children are ready
separate slightly from their parents and to begin to step into their own
burgeoning identities. The second grade curriculum readies them for this time
of increased independence by reminding them that we are all capable of doing
both right and wrong, and that we are responsible for that choice. Animal
fables explore the consequences of such unsightly, but very real, human
behaviors stemming from unmanaged greed, jealousy, arrogance and other traits.
The fables, then, are implicitly compared with stories of human individuals
acting with compassion, courage, wisdom and kindness to achieve the ultimate of
human endeavors - the creation of a just and goodly world. The pairing of these
two types of tales tells listeners that, while our base instincts are very
real, they are not the path to our highest of human achievements. The stories
in this CD present only one side of the picture – they are meant to
exemplify the best of humanity.

As with all folktales,
these stories are meant to be listened to one at a time, with time to reflect
in between. Young children should have the opportunity for free play after
listening to each story. If a child chooses to incorporate the story into his
play, you can be sure that he is bringing the story into his inner life and
making it meaningful in his own way.

Great King
Goodness is a Buddhist Story that speaks of the values of
non-violence and compassion. Listeners are meant to understand that King
Goodness is a quintessential role model for these values. If I were telling
this to a Buddhist audience, I would include the insight from the original
story that King Goodness is said to be a previous incarnation of Buddha. That
is, he is a Boddhisatva – someone who has achieved enough enlightenment
to end his cycle of reincarnation, but chooses to return to human life to help
others. That’s a complicated way of saying that he’s as good as it
gets!

The story encompasses
many of our common misconceptions about compassion. King Goodness’s
kindness is seen as a weakness. And, indeed, kindness can appear to be the
opposite of warrior-like strength. But, kindness takes courage –
sometimes even more courage than anger or hatred, which are fairly easy to fall
into. Kindness requires us to stop and think, to go against the grain, to rise
above our instincts. Rather than a physical risk, kindness requires an
emotional risk. When we act in kindness, we leave ourselves vulnerable, just as
King Goodness is vulnerable to attack. Indeed, we are meant to associate King
Goodness with vulnerability. The antelope, which King Goodness adopts as his
signatory animal, is not a predator. The antelope is a prey animal, and thus,
highly vulnerable. But the antelope is swift and not so easy to catch. In
Buddhist cultures, meat-eaters – predator animals – are seen as
being at a less evolved spiritual place than vegetarians. This has to do with
the vulnerability of those who do not prey upon others. It takes a good measure
of non-conventional strength to succeed when our main weapon – predation
– is deemed unusable.

Indeed, it takes very
high levels of emotional strength to stand strong in the face of that
vulnerability. But, if we can find that emotional strength, as King Goodness
does, the payoff is large – long term peace and safety. Had King Goodness
punished the raiding party that came into his kingdom, he might not have met
the invading army. We often think that punishment, or vengeance, provides
safety. But too often, it only provides an escalation of wrong doing and
violence. King Goodness’s goal is the long term maintenance of a peaceful
kingdom. To achieve that goal, he must remain strong in his values. His ability
to forgive his enemy at the end of the story is a crucial part of his ability
to bring overall safety to his kingdom. Had he taken vengeance on the King of
Kosala, he would have been stuck with the war that he had tried to avert.
Instead, he found himself with a loyal protector for the rest of his
days.

The symbolism of the
goblins in this story also show us something of King Goodness’s nature.
The Goblins are a symbol of evil; they deal with death. But they do so in way
that renews life. Because the goblins devour the dead bodies, they return to
the earth and continue the ecological cycle of death and rebirth Like the
stories on When the Last Leaf Falls: Stories About Letting Go, the goblins
represent the nature of change – we must detach from the old in order to
make room for the new. The goblins, then, are not wholly a force of evil, but
they are unpleasant and not very noble. That King Goodness befriends them and
helps them is a sign of his wisdom. A similar trait is found in Jewish lore. In
the Jewish tradition, the teaching of wisdom is done through the character of
King Solomon, who is held to be the wisest of the wise. King Solomon is known
for his relationship with Asmodeus, King of the Demons. He invites Asmodeus to
his palace, travels with him, and even asks for advice from the King of the
Demons. What could a demon possibly teach to a great and noble king? Plenty.
Part of King Solomon’s wisdom comes from his ability to understand the
ways of evil without succumbing to that evil. King Goodness has the same wisdom
– he knows how to put the forces of death to use in order to bring
renewal. Indeed, because he remains true to his noble side when in the presence
of the goblins, even the goblins recognize that he is master over them, not the
other way around.

King Goodness also
knows how to use the animalistic side of human nature to help free himself. He
shows this when he uses the jackal’s energy and struggle to loosen the
dirt that buries him. Again, he knows how to use the less noble forces of life
without succumbing to them. In the end, King Goodness frees himself and regains
his kingdom through his compassion towards his enemies and towards those that
others may consider to be more lowly than him.

The
Tiger’s Whisker is a story from Korea, but similar stories
come from all over the world. Yun Ok shows us the true meaning of heroism with
her willingness to endure hardship and to put her own life in danger in order
to help another. While the bulk of her work is in taming the tiger itself, her
entire journey gives us a metaphor for healing.

Mountains are often
thought of as holy places in Asian cultures. From the top, we can gain a
bird’s eye view that brings us a broader perspective. Since a
bird’s eye view over one’s life is often associated with Spirit or
the Divine, Yun Ok’s climb up the mountain can be viewed as a spiritual
quest. To truly heal another, we must be engage our own spirit. Of course, the
path is not easy, and sometimes she slips back to the bottom and must begin
again, just as we often must do when on a spiritual path.

The field of snakes
that she passes through represent the danger of false wisdom on the spiritual
path. In many storytelling cultures, snakes represent wisdom because they shed
their skin each year. This is a metaphor for an ability to shed one’s
outer identities to allow for growth and renewal. But, shedding the skin can also be
representative of a surface level change, akin to putting on a costume. In this
use, snakes can represent false wisdom. This sense of false wisdom often comes
up in relation to arrogance. We pretend that we know the answer, because we
don’t want to admit that we don’t actually know the answer. But
this puts us on the wrong path. To get past the problem of false wisdom, Yun Ok
must step carefully.

She then comes to a
tangled, thorny forest that symbolizes the tangled, thorny nature of emotional
problems. This part of the journey gives her cuts and scrapes, symbolic of
emotional wounds.

Then she must cross a
swift moving body of water. To see the symbolism of the river, take a minute to
think about the properties of water – it won’t move unless put in
motion by another force and then won’t stop moving until it is stopped by
another force. Gravity will cause a portion of a mountain lake to run down the
mountainside in the form of a stream, which will stay put at the bottom of the
mountain unless moved again by another force. Water goes where you put it. It
is passive. But, if it gathers up force, as in the case of a tsunami started by
an undersea earthquake, it can be unstoppable. Yun Ok’s crossing of the
river symbolically tells us that she must somehow cross the remnants of former
energies that are now passively in her way. For example, she might face built
up anger that hardened into a sense of immobility.

But she manages all of
these challenges, night after night. Her most difficult challenge is the actual
taming of the beast, which of course is a metaphor for the beast within her
post-war husband. When she tames this beast, we see that, as the healer says, a
potion won’t solve all problems, but hard work and dedication will.

The Guest
Chenoo is a tale from the Wabanki people. In this story, the
heroine’s compassion toward her enemy turns him from a monster into a
human. The story reminds me of a true story from Native American lore. Two
tribes find that they are able to end generations of fighting simply by
pledging to always greet each other with the words (roughly translated),
“I see that you are human.” It took some time, but eventually all
fighting stopped forever more. The message here is clear. An enemy is simply
someone for whom we have no compassion. Add back that compassion, and we lose
the enemy.

In this story, the
Great Spirit that Nesoowah prays to could be seen as a metaphor for the divine
within or the higher self. The compassion that she must muster in order to save
the raging Elaak can only come from a place of connection to some type of
spirit – either within or without. Her choices were not rational, or even
reasonable. They came from the wisdom of a very broad perspective on the human
capacity for healing and change. She had to access this part of herself in
order to bring about the change. The Native Americans who stopped their wars by
greeting each other with “I see that you are human” also had to
access to a higher part of themselves in order drop centuries of unthinking
hatred and replace it with compassion.

The Magic
Brocade is a story from China. Although it is a Chinese story, we
will recognize the house in the story as a metaphor for the American Dream
– a house that we can call our own and that embodies our ideal of
comfortable living. In many folktales, the hero braves many challenges in order
to achieve his own dreams. In this tale, the hero braves many challenges for
the sole purpose of helping someone else achieve their dream. But, the son
gains his own happiness in the course of helping another. This metaphor hides a
frequent truth about life – success comes most easily when we strive for
goals in which others gain. Maybe this is just because, when we are working
towards goals in which others benefit, we find we always have ample help. But
it could also be that selfish success is a lonely success, and may not even
bring happiness at all, as evidenced by the older son. Success is happiest when
shared.